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Monday 14 November 2011

MSC gets brownie points from the WWF.

Fisheries engaged in the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) programme show clear improvements in environmental performance throughout the whole certification process, according to an independent study released last week. The study, Researching the Environmental Impacts of the MSC Certification Programme, is the first ever to examine fishery performance through the MSC assessment process. It focused on improvements in eight key outcome performance indicators: stock status; population reference points; stock recovery; retained species; bycatch species; endangered, threatened and protected (ETP) species; habitats and environments. Improvements were noted from the initial fishery pre-assessments, through assessment and certification. Five years after certification, over 90 percent of the performance indicators measured were achieving high scores. 


 Good for the environment and good for fisheries 


 “This study shows that the MSC certification system works well, that it measures the performance of a fishery based on marine conservation indicators in the oceans, and that it values the feedback from stakeholders in this process,” said Alfred Schumm, Leader Smart Fishing Initiative, WWF’s global fisheries programme. “As such, I believe that the MSC certification system is outweighing other existing seafood certification systems currently on the market.” In addition to ensuring the robust process of each fishery undergoing certification, WWF wanted the study to measure the environmental impacts of the MSC standards in the oceans. The results showed that MSC is also the only seafood standard which can prove that certification is also good for the environment and not only for the fisheries. 


Healthy, well-managed and full of life 


 WWF has a vision for the world’s oceans: that they are healthy, well-managed and full of life, providing valuable resources for the welfare of humanity. In order to help achieve this vision WWF formed the Smart Fishing Global Initiative (SFI), that participates in certification programmes like the MSC to ensure that responsible management and trade of four key fishery populations results in recovering and resilient marine eco-systems, improved livelihoods for coastal communities and strengthened food security for the Planet.


Download Researching the Impacts of the MSC Certification Programme.

Sunday 13 November 2011

AIS spotting.

Research ship, Cefas Endeavour is in the middle of her Irish Sea Groundfish survey.......
while sou'west of her the Govenek of Ladram has just left the range of the AIS from VesselTracker as she steams westwards bound for the fishing grounds.

Remembrance Sunday.

Pro Patria
Newlyn

Breezy morning.

 Penzance's World War One memorial carries names on both sides of the plinth........
 and each year residents add their own tributes to the fallen.........
 round the corner their is evidence of others not quite so respectful of public works.......
 inside the wet dock the Scillonian III is in her winter quarters.......
 while outside the seas lash the lighthouse pier.......
 heralding a new round of discussion and consultation over the future of the port.......
which will hopefully see a more workable solution to the needs of harbour users.

Saturday 12 November 2011

Britain in a day - down Newlyn way.

 Early start for Britain in a Day, all aboard........
 just in from Lapland, Dasher arrives in time for this year's Harbour Lights show......
 all that's left of the Dom Bosco.......
 with the keel in four pieces......
 Georges Johannes up on the slip........
and a chance to study so local sea life........
 these days the Old Quay looks ripe for development with plenty of room for more small boats.........
 heavy cloud heading down the Coombe......
 Debs appears to have been aggravated again by the looks of things.......
 classic Morgan three-wheeler graces the porch of the Mission.......
 as the heavy cloud passes over Penlee Point
 there's a dash of reds for more painterly subjects.......
and a couple of sailboats to draw on for inspiration.

Cefas Endeavour starts blogging from sea!

Good news from our fishy friends over at Cefas aboard the Cefas Endeavour, they have started a live blog from the boat while she is at sea on her survey work.


The blog is an integral part of the larger Cefas web site and not easy to find navigating from the home page! Fishing survey work aboard the Endeavour is just one small aspect of the huge research programme that Cefas are involved with. A summary of their ongoing fisheries partnership programme can be accessed here:
The blog is being compiled by the resident SIC (Scientist in Charge?) for each trip. During the current research voyage this job falls to Rob who is doing a good job chronicling both research and life aboard events at the end of each working day. the Cefas news team have promised to add a comments section to the blog which will enable followers to contact the research team at sea and put questions and thoughts directly to the scientists during the survey period.


This is a fantastic step forward for the scientific community in building a working relationship with the industry that it serves - so hats off to Cefas for this! The blog's home page is on the News section of the Cefas web site and includes an RSS feed. Through the Gaps has added a feed to Twitter so as soon as Rob on the ship blogs, Twitter will let you know!

Thursday 10 November 2011

Trawlers Dealing With Biggest Change In 50 Years

This article appeared on the Oregon Public Broadcast's web site - a look at how west coast fishermen in one US stae are now managing their fishing effort - via ITQs.

"Trawl fishing on the west coast is a very different business this year. That’s because trawlers need to follow new rules that set individual quotas for how many fish they can catch. The industry calls it the biggest change in 50 years. The goal is to reduce-over fishing, and to stop trawlers from throwing out fish they don’t want. The program is also designed to make the fishing business more predictable. But the so-called “catch share” system could also drive more trawlers out of business.

To see what has changed, Oregon Field Guide's Vince Patton spent a day with one fisherman on the high seas. The Cape Windy is a small boat as trawlers go -- 58 feet long. Paul Kujala's one of the small operators. He and the entire west coast trawl fleet have a whole new set of rules to follow this year. Kujala needs to obey them -- and stay in business. "Well I’m trying hard to stay in it, What gives me hope is we have, lower expenses than…than a lot of other trawlers. Because I take only one deckhand with me," Kujala said. "There’s relatively few fishermen left than there has been in the past. And so it is a pretty small world now," Kujala said. Kujala's is one of just 120 trawlers left on the West Coast. In the 1990's there were 500.

On this day, Kujala leaves port in Warrenton, crosses the Columbia Bar and finds a favorite fishing spot about 14 miles off the Oregon coast. He trawls the muddy ocean floor for ground fish. Every time he pulls in his nets, he's making a bet. A gamble that he'll catch the fish he wants - and avoid the kinds that have been overfished and could get him in trouble. Kujala pulls in a net full of flat, brown fish. It's just what he expected to find here. "The majority of what this tow has in it is Dover Sole. This is the Dover Sole here," he said. He drops the net again in the same spot. This time he brings up a stunning surprise. "I can't believe it," he laughed. "They’re Canary Rockfish. What are the odds? I've never had a tow like this in my life. This is what normally you’re trying to avoid," he said. It's hard to imagine a worse fish to catch. Canary rockfish are highly restricted. And he didn't just land a few. He's got a deck full of hundreds of the bright orange fish.

A year ago, these fish would have been illegal to bring back to dock. He'd just discard them. Throw them overboard. Now, he can bring them in and sell them. But every pound is tallied. Kujala is worried he just exceeded his annual canary rockfish quota in one tow. Until he knows for sure, all fishing stops. He pulls in his nets and spends the next 3 hours on pins and needles. He's got to return to port where he can compare his quota to what he's caught this year. "I’ve probably not caught more than five fish in one tow in my entire life," he explained. "And I’ve fished here a lot," he said laughing. "But that's the way it goes. That's fishing," he said.

The individual quota system is brand new this year. Under the old system all the trawl boats shared a quota. If one boat caught too much of a particularly threatened kind of fish, then every trawler on the west coast had to stop fishing. The new system divvies up the quotas boat by boat. Now if someone catches too much of one fish, only that boat gets shut down. Brad Pettinger heads the Oregon Trawl Commission. He says the trawl industry itself pushed for this radical overhaul. "This is probably the biggest changes in the fisheries probably the last fifty years," Pettinger said. So what we’ve asked for is basically, let’s have something that does this better. Let’s have something that reduces the waste, gives a certainty to the market. People can plan. Let’s treat it like a business," he said.

To make sure that each boat follows the rules, there's a built-in enforcer. Every boat must now carry a paid observer who weighs and counts each fish. The observer on Kujala's boat counts more than 600 pounds of canary rockfish. After nine hours at sea, the Cape Windy returns to the dock in Warrenton. Kujala heads to a computer to check the quota website. Sure enough, he's caught at least 48 pounds more canary rockfish than he’s allowed. Kujala still has one option: now he can try to bargain for part of another trawler’s Canary rock fish quota. "So we got to…we’ve got to be real nice to somebody else so we can get forty-eight pounds of Canary’s from them, to cover what we caught there that one tow. And, we won’t be able to go fishing until we do," he explained.

The new "catch share" program aims to protect threatened species by preventing over fishing. It gives a much more accurate picture of how many fish have been caught. And far fewer unwanted fish are being thrown overboard. The Trawl Commission's Brad Pettinger says that the discard rate has dropped from 25 percent a year ago to less then 5 percent this fall. "By and large, people are gonna fish cleaner. Because they know that whatever they do, they’re gonna have to account for it," he said. As for Kujala, he's still not sure what he thinks of the new system. "So far it’s the jury’s still out a little bit. There’s pluses and minuses. so the individual accountability was attractive to a lot of the fishermen, so that you couldn’t step on my toes, I couldn’t step on yours. Now, with the individual catch shares, individually we all have a certain amount of fish," Kuajala said. Kuajala spends the next day horse-trading. A fellow trawler agrees to a deal and gives him enough Canary Rockfish quota to cover his unwanted haul. The Cape Windy is back to fishing again."

Vince Patton / OPB Read the full story here courtesy of the OPB.